Windy Schoby
Fish and Wildlife Policy Advisor, Northwest Power and Conservation Council — Salmon, Idaho • Fundamentals Cohort 1

Fish and Wildlife Policy Advisor, Northwest Power and Conservation Council — Salmon, Idaho • Fundamentals Cohort 1
WCLDP Program
For Windy Schoby, WCLDP didn’t just add tools to her toolkit — it changed how she reads the systems, people, and dynamics around her. From agency work to her own community, the tools of adaptive leadership have traveled with her everywhere.
– Windy Schoby
Experiential Learning
Through WCLDP, Windy deepened her ability to hold multiple interpretations of a situation — using that skill to guide groups through active listening and courageous conversation. She learned the power of asking questions that open discussion rather than close it.
The shift was practical and immediate. Asking hard questions can be disruptive — but Windy found it nearly always leads to greater progress and engagement, both inside organizations and across factions of stakeholder groups.
Leadership Beyond the Job
Outside of her professional role, Windy applied WCLDP tools to help her community navigate a school bond — a deeply local, high-stakes adaptive challenge. After an earlier failure to mobilize community support, her team asked harder questions and engaged more honestly with what was holding people back.
The Outcome
The effort succeeded. Her community is now building a brand-new prekindergarten through grade 8 school — proof that adaptive leadership tools don’t stay at work. They go home, too.
Lasting Impact
Why It Matters
Self-Awareness as a Leadership Tool
Fellows leave with a sharper understanding of their own strengths, blind spots, and patterns — and the confidence to act from that knowledge rather than around it.
Holding Multiple Interpretations
The ability to sit with competing perspectives — rather than collapsing toward the easiest answer — is one of the most transferable skills the program builds.
Asking the Hard Question
Productive discomfort moves groups forward. Fellows learn to raise the questions others are avoiding — and to do it with skill, not just courage.
The Power of Story
At the policy level and beyond, stories change outcomes. Fellows continue developing this practice long after graduation — because some tools only deepen with time.
Investing in the future of an organization and having people with these skills is vitally important. It can become a catalyst for change — multi-directional, collaborative, and lasting. But it requires showing up with an open mind.
Continued Practice
– Windy Schoby